Sharing the Cost of a Public Good: an Incentive-Constrained Axiomatic Approach


Autoria(s): Sprumont, Yves; MANIQUET, François
Data(s)

04/02/2008

04/02/2008

01/07/2006

Resumo

We study the problem of provision and cost-sharing of a public good in large economies where exclusion, complete or partial, is possible. We search for incentive-constrained efficient allocation rules that display fairness properties. Population monotonicity says that an increase in population should not be detrimental to anyone. Demand monotonicity states that an increase in the demand for the public good (in the sense of a first-order stochastic dominance shift in the distribution of preferences) should not be detrimental to any agent whose preferences remain unchanged. Under suitable domain restrictions, there exists a unique incentive-constrained efficient and demand-monotonic allocation rule: the so-called serial rule. In the binary public good case, the serial rule is also the only incentive-constrained efficient and population-monotonic rule.

Formato

557483 bytes

application/pdf

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/1866/2146

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Université de Montréal, Département de sciences économiques

Relação

Cahier de recherche #2006-09

Palavras-Chave #Sharing the Cost of a Public Good: an Incentive-Constrained Axiomatic Approach #incentive compatibility #fairness #serial rule #D63 #D71
Tipo

Article